TheJammyTurtle
U19 Cricketer
Batting so well here Faf.Surviving the tough period and making sure the bad balls are put away.
better than relying on a single telephoto lens 80m awayWhich it pretty much is. These umps fail.to see no balls right under their noses, how can they judge a catch 40 yards away. It seems more like they give it out because they are sure the batsman nicked it more than anything. It's good that consistency has been shown in this series with respect to the decisions.
I have given up trying to explain this to people....better than relying on a single telephoto lens 80m away
Faf has been brilliant for SA the last 2 years both as a batsman and as a leader.Batting so well here Faf.Surviving the tough period and making sure the bad balls are put away.
Toughing it out there and leading by example. Its been proper.Batting so well here Faf.Surviving the tough period and making sure the bad balls are put away.
No it isnt. A replay and a 3rd umpire who has the time to see whether the ball actually bounced or not is definitely superior to an umpire who is not there to just look at the slips and judge whether a catch may have been taken. The 2d 3d argument isn't relevant here. Has there ever been a dubious catch with a soft Signal not out anyway?. better than relying on a single telephoto lens 80m away
the 3rd umpire can look at the same replay as often as he likes. it will not remove the fundamental and extreme optical limitations caused by viewing a scenario such as a low catch with a telephoto lens. the inability to accurately perceive depth in high-contrast, low-resolution scenarios like this because you have one lens and the distance between the hands, the ball, and the ground are so minimal relative to the focal length of the lens that they all effectively happen on a single focal plane, which means you have no ability to accurate perceive distance bewteen the ball and the gorund.No it isnt. A replay and a 3rd umpire who has the time to see whether the ball actually bounced or not is definitely superior to an umpire who is not there to just look at the slips and judge whether a catch may have been taken. The 2d 3d argument isn't relevant here. Has there ever been a dubious catch with a soft Signal not out anyway?
I swear this is just a bait now....Wrt the catch. Why do his hands and wrists keep moving and the ball stay still during the catch. Because the ball is being rammed into the ground. It's just physics.
this, in fact, is not how physics worksWrt the catch. Why do his hands and wrists keep moving and the ball stay still during the catch. Because the ball is being rammed into the ground. It's just physics.
Yeah there shouldn't be any debate about it at all IMO. I get the points about foreshortening etc but sometimes it's not close enough for that to really come into play, and this was one of those times.Is this going to be one of those ones where I watch the highlights and see the ball clearly touching the ground?
Fair enough but despite the flaws associated with it i don't see how an onfield umpire who hasn't seen the whole catch when it happened save for maybe a split second is better than the 3rd umpire at judging whether or not it bounced. There's a whole reason he goes up in the first place and it's not because he's relatively sure. Distance not withstanding it is not always an optical illusion even at the current camera distance.the 3rd umpire can look at the same replay as often as he likes. it will not remove the fundamental and extreme optical limitations caused by viewing a scenario such as a low catch with a telephoto lens. the inability to accurately perceive depth in high-contrast, low-resolution scenarios like this because you have one lens and the distance between the hands, the ball, and the ground are so minimal relative to the focal length of the lens that they all effectively happen on a single focal plane, which means you have no ability to accurate perceive distance bewteen the ball and the gorund.
in short this means you are guessing, every single time, as to whether the ball has truly hit the ground or not, unless relying on the same physical cues as ever: is the ball going up, is the ball going down, was the fielder's hands under the ball. what you cannot do is determine from an image whether the ball is touching the grass, because basically any distance in that scenario is rendered on the image plane as zero.
because the on-field umpire is closer and, vitally, has two eyes, so binocular vision makes him much better at judging small differences in distance.Fair enough but despite the flaws associated with it i don't see how an onfield umpire who hasn't seen the whole catch when it happened save for maybe a split second is better than the 3rd umpire at judging whether or not it bounced. There's a whole reason he goes up in the first place and it's not because he's relatively sure. Distance not withstanding it is not always an optical illusion even at the current camera distance.
I felt he pushed it into the ground after not quite taking it cleanly... still not sure it was good enough to overrule the onfield call though.okay having seen that yeah that's different to a lot of the "out but not given". he doesn't catch it cleanly at all on the first attempt
to me it just looked like he dropped it, and it bounced back into his fingers.I felt he pushed it into the ground after not quite taking it cleanly... still not sure it was good enough to overrule the onfield call though.